SHANGHAI—China’s environmental problems remain
serious with local governments not putting enough pressure on businesses to
control pollution, the nation’s environment protection minister has said.
Efforts to toughen environment laws have not done enough to fix the
widespread problems for China’s air, lakes and rivers, Zhang Lijun said
Tuesday, according to the official Xinhua news agency.
“The general situation of environmental pollution does not allow us to be
optimistic,” Zhang was quoted telling a national meeting on pollution control
in Shanghai.
Zhang’s ministry replaced the environmental protection agency last year
with greater powers, but enforcement still depends largely on local officials.
Zhang said environmental protection departments across the country needed
to place greater pressure on businesses to contain pollution, according to
Xinhua.
“The fundamental way to overcome this is to continue to press enterprises
to reduce pollution emissions through technology and management,” he said.
Local governments, however, often face a conflict of interest because they
benefit economically from heavily polluting industries.
Nearly a quarter of the monitoring stations set up along major rivers, such
as the Yangtze and Yellow, reported the worst water quality on China’s
six-level scale, the report said, citing documents distributed at the meeting.
Nearly 40 percent of the water in 28 major lakes also registered level six
ratings—meaning it was too polluted for even farm irrigation.
In urban areas 90 percent of river water and half of underground water is
polluted, the report said.
Meanwhile, the average air quality in two out of five Chinese cities ranges
from “polluted” to “hazardous”, according to a survey conducted in November in
320 cities, according to Xinhua.
In one of the latest reported incidents, hundreds of thousands of people in
the eastern Chinese city of Yancheng had their tap water cut off over the
weekend after a chemical company spilled their products into a local river.
One of the most high-profile cases occurred in 2005, when a massive
chemical spill into northeast China’s Songhua River resulted in tap water
being cut for millions of people and pollution flowing into Russia.
source: Agence France-Presse
Comments
View as Flat